Some might say she looks like mutton dressed as lamb - after all, sheep don't usually wear a bra.

The Beulah ewe wearing a bra to hold up her dropped udder, so her two three-day-old lambs can feed. Picture: DENISE BRADLEY

But there’s a very good reason for this Norfolk ewe’s tantalising foray into designer lambing lingerie.

The buxom Beulah is among the new springtime mothers at Barnards Farm in Wymondham, but her droopy udder meant she was struggling to feed her twin lambs.

So shepherd David Cross came up with an unlikely solution from a neighbour’s underwear drawer – customising a discarded 44DD bra into the world’s first “Wonder-braaaaa”.

“She’s an older Beulah ewe, perfectly fit and healthy, just her udder needed a bit of extra support to make it easier for the lambs to latch on,” said Mr Cross’s wife, Kathryn. “She’s got plenty of milk but got a bit droopy in the undercarriage – it comes to us all in old age.

Sheep farmer David Cross at Wymondham, with his Beulah ewe wearing a bra to hold up her dropped udder, so her two three-day-old lambs can feed. Picture: DENISE BRADLEY

“My neighbour was throwing out an old bra and David thought it could be re-purposed as a ‘boulder holder’ to help the ewe out. He cut out a couple of holes for the teats and her back legs fitted nicely through the straps and it works a treat.

“The twin lambs needed a bit of guidance to start with but they are getting the hang of it now.

“Shepherds have to be quite creative sometimes.”

The two three-day-old lambs who are able to feed from their mother after she was fitted with a bra. Picture: DENISE BRADLEY